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Research: Healthcare
Nicox published a third quarter operational update on 19 October and provided new prescriptions uptake data for its two commercial-stage out-licensed products, Vyzulta and Zerviate. Nicox reported that the number of US prescriptions for Vyzulta rose by 35% y-o-y in Q321 and for Zerviate the increase was 213% y-o-y. Net royalties increased by c €0.1m q-o-q to €0.7m. The company also reiterated recent guidance on the progress of its key internal programmes, including the reporting of primary efficacy data for the Mont Blanc NCX-470 Phase III study in Q123.
Nicox |
Commercial products continue to grow |
Q321 update |
Pharma & biotech |
26 October 2021 |
Share price performance
Business description
Next events
Analysts
NicoxNicox is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited |
Nicox published a third quarter operational update on 19 October and provided new prescriptions uptake data for its two commercial-stage out-licensed products, Vyzulta and Zerviate. Nicox reported that the number of US prescriptions for Vyzulta rose by 35% y-o-y in Q321 and for Zerviate the increase was 213% y-o-y. Net royalties increased by c €0.1m q-o-q to €0.7m. The company also reiterated recent guidance on the progress of its key internal programmes, including the reporting of primary efficacy data for the Mont Blanc NCX-470 Phase III study in Q123.
Year end |
Revenue (€m) |
PBT* |
EPS* |
DPS |
P/E |
Yield |
12/19 |
8.3 |
(16.0) |
(0.40) |
0.0 |
N/A |
N/A |
12/20 |
14.4 |
(10.2) |
(0.30) |
0.0 |
N/A |
N/A |
12/21e |
5.7 |
(20.3) |
(0.55) |
0.0 |
N/A |
N/A |
12/22e |
8.8 |
(16.5) |
(0.44) |
0.0 |
N/A |
N/A |
Note: *PBT and EPS are normalised, excluding amortisation of acquired intangibles, exceptional items and share-based payments. Normalised 2020 figures differ from reported amounts primarily due to the €6.9m loss reported following the divestment of Nicox’s holdings in VISUfarma.
Vyzulta: Net US pricing could be stabilising
Encouragingly, Nicox believes that the trend whereby Vyzulta revenue growth lagged prescriptions growth (given lower reimbursement rates attributed to some of the more recently negotiated insurance plans) could be ending, as more than 70% of US private and Medicare plans now cover the drug. Hence, the company anticipates that by Q421 Vyzulta US net sales (and associated royalties to Nicox) should increase generally in-line with US net prescription growth levels.
NCX-470 drives majority of pipeline value
The NCX-470 programme reflects c 73% of our rNPV valuation and we remain positive on its prospects as a potential first-line glaucoma therapeutic drug. Top-line data from the Mont Blanc study is expected in Q123. We believe that NCX-470, if approved, could become the most potent single-agent glaucoma drug on the market in terms of intraocular pressure (IOP) lowering efficacy, aided by its dual mechanistic approach (nitric oxide donation and prostaglandin F2α activity). We are also encouraged by recent preclinical data showing that it may also provide benefit to glaucoma patients through a mechanism other than IOP reduction, namely by potentially improving ocular perfusion.
Valuation: Maintaining rNPV of c €283m
At 30 September 2021, Nicox had €32.7m in cash and equivalents (vs €36.5m at 30 June) and it reported €18.1m in gross debt. We believe Nicox has sufficient cash to fund operations until H222 and we continue to model that it will need to raise €55m (modelled as illustrative debt), including €10m in 2022, prior to launching NCX-470 in H225. We maintain our existing forecasts and rNPV of €282.8m. After adding €14.6m in H121 net cash, we obtain an equity value of €297.4m, or €8.00 per share.
Third quarter pipeline update
Nicox provided a third quarter operational update on 19 October, and provided new prescriptions uptake data for its two commercial-stage out-licensed products, Vyzulta (latanoprostene bunod) and Zerviate (topical cetirizine), as it obtains recurring revenue from them. Vyzulta, the first nitric oxide (NO)-donating PGA drug approved for the treatment of glaucoma, is commercialised by Bausch + Lomb (B+L), Nicox’s exclusive commercial partner for the product, entitling Nicox to net royalties of c 6–12% of global sales. Nicox reported that the number of US prescriptions for Vyzulta rose by 35% y-o-y in Q321 (compared to a 21% y-o-y increase in Q221).
Zerviate is an antihistamine drug approved by the FDA for the treatment of ocular itching associated with allergic conjunctivitis. Zerviate is licensed by Nicox in the United States to Eyevance (acquired by Santen in September 2020) and was launched in the United States in Q120. Nicox’s effective royalty from Eyevance is c 5% until certain manufacturing costs under their licensing agreement are covered, after which the royalty rate rises to 8–15%. Nicox reported that the total number of US Zerviate prescriptions increased by 213% y-o-y in Q321, showing a continued robust increase and ramp up from the period following the launch, although Santen/Eyevance sales have not been disclosed yet. Nicox also licensed Zerviate to Ocumension in the Chinese market, but to our knowledge, it has not yet been commercialised in this region or other ex-US territories.
Net royalties (consisting of total royalty payments received by Nicox after its own royalty payment obligations1 to Pfizer are paid) were increased by c €0.1m q-o-q, to €0.7m. While the breakdown in royalties (B+L vs Eyevance) was not disclosed, we estimate the large majority of royalties continues to be from Vyzulta sales (B+L). Encouragingly, Nicox believes that the trend whereby Vyzulta revenue growth lagged prescriptions growth (given lower reimbursement rates attributed to some of the more recently negotiated insurance plans, as discussed here) could be ending, as more than 70% of US private and Medicare plans now cover the drug. Hence, it anticipates that by Q421 Vyzulta US net sales (and associated royalties to Nicox) should increase generally in line with US net prescription growth levels.
NCX-470 development continuing as planned
The company also reiterated recent guidance on the progress of its key internal programmes, namely NCX-470 and NCX-4251.
Lead candidate NCX-470 is based on the company’s proprietary NO-donating platform, which combines an NO-donating molecule with an analogue of established prostaglandin F2α (PGA) drug bimatoprost, thereby providing an additional mechanism for the drug to reduce IOP. Top-line data from Mont Blanc, the first of two Phase III studies, is guided for Q123, and results from the second Phase III study, Denali, are expected before the end of 2023. We continue to forecast potential NCX-470 commercialisation in H225.
The primary endpoint of both studies is the mean IOP reduction from a time-matched baseline at 8am and 4pm time points at weeks two and six and month three visits. IOP reduction is the most widely accepted measure of a glaucoma treatment’s efficacy in decelerating disease progression. As discussed in our initiation report, PGA drugs are the most commonly used first-line glaucoma treatment and bimatoprost (marketed as Lumigan 0.01% by AbbVie) is currently the best-selling branded glaucoma drug in the United States in terms of revenue. In Nicox’s Phase II study (Dolomites), NCX-470 (at 0.065% concentration) demonstrated both statistical non-inferiority and superiority in IOP lowering than PGA drug latanoprost at day 28, being up to 1.4mmHg superior (in IOP lowering efficacy) to it at day 28 (p<0.025). The chosen NCX-470 concentration (0.1%) in Mont Blanc and Denali is higher than the 0.065% used in the Dolomites study and hence it is possible that these trials could show a higher incremental IOP reduction to latanoprost. If such efficacy is confirmed in these trials, NCX-470 could potentially become the first non-combination glaucoma drug product in pivotal studies with statistical superiority to a standalone PGA drug, which we believe should support its market adoption and competitiveness.
As mentioned in our 5 October note, the company recently reported encouraging preclinical data showing that NCX-470 may also provide benefit in glaucoma patients through a mechanism other than IOP reduction, namely by potentially improving ocular perfusion. We believe there is much interest in alternative methods to provide neuroprotection to the retinal ganglion cells affected by the condition, such as by improving ocular perfusion.
Exhibit 1: NCX-470 showing retinal cell protection in a non-clinical animal model* |
Source: Nicox. Note: * Nicox internal data in a model of ischemia/reperfusion injury to the optic nerve in rabbits induced by ET-1. ET-1 alone was administered twice-weekly for two weeks, followed by concomitant dosing with NCX 470 or vehicle for a further 4 weeks |
In the above preclinical study on rabbits, a well-defined model of ischemia/reperfusion injury to the optic nerve was induced by endothelin-1 (ET-1), which was applied twice weekly for two weeks, followed by concomitant dosing with NCX-470 0.1% twice daily or vehicle for an additional four weeks. The dosing of ET-1 increased ophthalmic artery resistivity after two weeks (p<0.05 vs baseline) and this continued to increase during the next four weeks in the vehicle group to approximately 40% of baseline at week six. This detrimental effect was significantly reversed in eyes co-administered with NCX-470 (p<0.05 vs vehicle at week six). The ET-1 dosing also lead to a marked decline in photoreceptor responses, which continued in eyes treated with vehicle. The decline was nearly completely reversed by week six in the NCX-470-treated eyes (p<0.05 vs vehicle).
With regards to NCX-4251 (a proprietary ophthalmic formulation of fluticasone propionate nanocrystals), the company previously reported that the drug did not meet its primary and secondary endpoints from its Mississippi Phase IIb study assessing once-daily dosed NCX-4251 against placebo (each arm dosed for 15 days) in 224 patients with acute exacerbations of blepharitis. The primary outcome measure was the proportion of patients achieving complete cure in all three of the selected eyelid-specific signs and symptoms of blepharitis (margin redness, debris and discomfort) at day 15. The two secondary endpoints were measures of the signs and symptoms of dry eye.
While the above endpoints were not met, the company reported a signal of potential efficacy as there were statistically significant improvements over placebo in the eyelid composite score (consisting of scores on a 0–3 scale in eyelid redness, debris and discomfort) at day 8 (p=0.029), day 11 (p=0.011) and day 15 (p=0.012). NCX 4251 was also found to be safe and well-tolerated over the 14 days of treatment, with no serious adverse events (AEs). The company plans to have a meeting with the FDA in early 2022 to discuss a future development plan for NCX-4251, after which it plans to provide an update on the next steps.
Exhibit 2: NCX-4251 Phase IIb data showing eyelid composite score reductions versus placebo |
Source: Nicox. Note: 1. Mississippi: US Multi-Center, Randomized, Double-Masked, Placebo-Controlled, Phase 2b Study Evaluating the Safety and Efficacyof NCX 4251 Ophthalmic Suspension, 0.1% QD for the Treatment of Acute Exacerbations of Blepharitis, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04675242, Eyelid Change from Baseline Composite Scores Study Eye. 2. Complete cure in the composite score of eyelid redness, eyelid discomfort and eyelid debris. Eyelid redness, eyelid discomfort and eyelid debris each scored on a scale of 0 to 3 (total composite score of 0 to 9). |
Financials and valuation
The company reported €2.4m in net Q321 revenue, as in addition to the €0.7m in Q321 net royalties described above, Nicox reported €1.7m in Q321 licensing revenue. This revenue relates to the $2m payment received by the company in July from Ocumension, which was attributable to the amendment of the March 2019 agreement covering Ocumension’s exclusive rights to develop and commercialise Zerviate in the Chinese and majority of South-East Asian markets. The $2m reflected a full advance payment of the future development and regulatory milestones for the product, but Nicox remains eligible to receive the same sales milestones of up to $17.2m, together with tiered royalties of between 5% and 9% of net Zerviate sales by Ocumension. Zerviate is currently being assessed in a confirmatory Phase III trial in China by Ocumension, to support a Chinese new drug application for the treatment of ocular itching associated with allergic conjunctivitis.
At 30 September 2021 Nicox had €32.7m in cash and equivalents (vs €36.5m at 30 June) and it reported €18.1m in gross debt, consisting of €16.1m in the form of a bond financing agreement with Kreos Capital and a €2m credit agreement with Société Générale and Le Crédit Lyonnais, guaranteed by the French State and granted in August 2020. Nicox expects cash at Q321 to be sufficient for it to meet its requirements for the next 12 months (assuming NCX-470 development alone). This guidance remains consistent with our maintained estimate that Nicox has sufficient funds on hand to operate into H222.
Our financial forecasts are unchanged from our 5 October note. We continue to model a €10m fund-raise in 2022, followed by an additional €10m in 2023, €20m in 2024 and €15m in 2025 (all of these fund-raisings are modelled as illustrative debt). Following the anticipated NCX-470 launch in H225, we do not expect Nicox to require additional capital as we expect its royalty streams plus NCX-470 sales should enable it to start achieving consistent positive operating income starting in H226.
Our rNPV valuation of €282.8m for Nicox is unchanged. After updating for Q321 net cash of €14.6m, we now obtain an equity value of €297.4m, or €8.00 per share.
Exhibit 3: Financial summary
€(000) |
2018 |
2019 |
2020 |
2021e |
2022e |
2023e |
2024e |
||
31-December |
IFRS |
IFRS |
IFRS |
IFRS |
IFRS |
IFRS |
IFRS |
||
PROFIT & LOSS |
|||||||||
Revenue |
|
|
4,717 |
8,260 |
14,423 |
5,672 |
8,793 |
11,422 |
21,103 |
Cost of Sales |
(690) |
(1,405) |
(1,516) |
(1,656) |
(2,288) |
(2,951) |
(5,461) |
||
Gross Profit |
4,027 |
6,855 |
12,907 |
4,017 |
6,505 |
8,471 |
15,642 |
||
General & Administrative |
(9,506) |
(7,666) |
(6,677) |
(6,520) |
(6,751) |
(10,044) |
(18,213) |
||
Net Research & Development |
(15,491) |
(16,883) |
(11,991) |
(17,731) |
(15,150) |
(15,550) |
(11,350) |
||
Amortisation of intangible assets |
0 |
(659) |
(1,252) |
(1,184) |
(1,178) |
(1,157) |
(1,136) |
||
Operating profit before exceptionals |
(20,970) |
(18,353) |
(7,013) |
(21,419) |
(16,575) |
(18,281) |
(15,057) |
||
EBITDA |
|
|
(20,718) |
(17,230) |
(5,270) |
(19,858) |
(15,104) |
(16,844) |
(13,610) |
Depreciation & other |
(252) |
(464) |
(491) |
(376) |
(292) |
(279) |
(311) |
||
Operating Profit (before amort. and except.) |
|
(20,970) |
(17,694) |
(5,761) |
(20,235) |
(15,396) |
(17,123) |
(13,920) |
|
Exceptionals including asset impairment |
302 |
(6,115) |
(6,621) |
(18) |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Other |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Operating Profit |
(20,668) |
(23,809) |
(12,382) |
(20,253) |
(15,396) |
(17,123) |
(13,920) |
||
Net Interest |
2,390 |
1,690 |
(4,436) |
(75) |
(1,141) |
(2,081) |
(3,079) |
||
Profit Before Tax (norm) |
|
|
(18,580) |
(16,004) |
(10,197) |
(20,310) |
(16,537) |
(19,204) |
(16,999) |
Profit Before Tax (FRS 3) |
|
|
(18,278) |
(22,778) |
(18,070) |
(21,512) |
(17,715) |
(20,362) |
(18,136) |
Tax |
(113) |
3,856 |
(28) |
24 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Profit After Tax and minority interests (norm) |
(18,693) |
(12,148) |
(10,225) |
(20,286) |
(16,537) |
(19,204) |
(16,999) |
||
Profit After Tax and minority interests (FRS 3) |
(18,391) |
(18,922) |
(18,098) |
(21,488) |
(17,715) |
(20,362) |
(18,136) |
||
Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m) |
29.6 |
30.3 |
33.7 |
37.2 |
37.5 |
37.9 |
38.2 |
||
EPS - normalised (€) |
|
|
(0.63) |
(0.40) |
(0.30) |
(0.55) |
(0.44) |
(0.51) |
(0.44) |
EPS - normalised and fully diluted (€) |
|
|
(0.63) |
(0.40) |
(0.30) |
(0.55) |
(0.44) |
(0.51) |
(0.44) |
EPS - (IFRS) (€) |
|
|
(0.62) |
(0.62) |
(0.54) |
(0.58) |
(0.47) |
(0.54) |
(0.47) |
Dividend per share (€) |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
||
BALANCE SHEET |
|||||||||
Fixed Assets |
|
|
112,498 |
110,660 |
89,745 |
91,244 |
90,015 |
88,864 |
87,945 |
Intangible Assets |
71,397 |
72,120 |
64,848 |
65,759 |
64,580 |
63,423 |
62,287 |
||
Tangible Assets |
25,628 |
27,517 |
24,829 |
25,417 |
25,366 |
25,372 |
25,589 |
||
Investments in long-term financial assets |
15,473 |
11,023 |
68 |
69 |
69 |
69 |
69 |
||
Current Assets |
|
|
26,092 |
32,146 |
52,521 |
35,059 |
29,879 |
20,417 |
22,838 |
Short-term investments |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Cash |
22,059 |
28,102 |
47,195 |
29,590 |
23,957 |
13,779 |
16,021 |
||
Other |
4,033 |
4,044 |
5,326 |
5,469 |
5,922 |
6,638 |
6,818 |
||
Current Liabilities |
|
|
(8,069) |
(9,828) |
(15,405) |
(14,998) |
(14,819) |
(13,054) |
(11,148) |
Creditors |
(8,069) |
(7,751) |
(10,116) |
(12,389) |
(12,210) |
(10,445) |
(8,539) |
||
Short term borrowings |
0 |
(2,077) |
(5,289) |
(2,609) |
(2,609) |
(2,609) |
(2,609) |
||
Long Term Liabilities |
|
|
(16,868) |
(23,681) |
(26,051) |
(29,105) |
(39,105) |
(49,105) |
(69,105) |
Long term borrowings |
0 |
(9,045) |
(12,687) |
(15,368) |
(25,368) |
(35,368) |
(55,368) |
||
Other long term liabilities |
(16,868) |
(14,636) |
(13,364) |
(13,737) |
(13,737) |
(13,737) |
(13,737) |
||
Net Assets |
|
|
113,653 |
109,297 |
100,810 |
82,201 |
65,970 |
47,122 |
30,530 |
CASH FLOW |
|||||||||
Operating Cash Flow |
|
|
(21,533) |
(17,741) |
(956) |
(17,060) |
(14,252) |
(17,811) |
(14,152) |
Net interest and financing income (expense) |
2,390 |
1,690 |
(4,436) |
(75) |
(1,141) |
(2,081) |
(3,079) |
||
Tax |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Capex |
(268) |
(95) |
(20) |
(115) |
(241) |
(286) |
(528) |
||
Acquisitions/disposals |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Financing |
0 |
11,290 |
13,321 |
(164) |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Dividends |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Net Cash Flow |
(19,411) |
(4,856) |
7,909 |
(17,414) |
(15,633) |
(20,177) |
(17,759) |
||
Opening net debt/(cash) |
|
|
0 |
(37,532) |
(28,003) |
(29,287) |
(11,682) |
3,951 |
24,129 |
HP finance leases initiated |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Other |
56,943 |
(4,673) |
(6,625) |
(191) |
0 |
0 |
0 |
||
Closing net debt/(cash) |
|
|
(37,532) |
(28,003) |
(29,287) |
(11,682) |
3,951 |
24,129 |
41,887 |
Lease debt |
na |
1,527 |
1,099 |
971 |
971 |
971 |
971 |
||
Closing net debt/(cash) inclusive of IFRS16 lease debt |
(37,532) |
(26,476) |
(28,188) |
(10,711) |
4,922 |
25,100 |
42,858 |
Source: Company reports, Edison Investment Research
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